Skyway Stage 3 and 4

Manila (Philippine Daily Inquirer/ANN) – Conglomerate San Miguel Corp. (SMC) and Jakarta-based Citra Group is building up a war chest worth US$1 billion for infrastructure projects in the Philippines and Indonesia, with the aim of becoming Southeast Asia’s biggest toll road player.

At a briefing yesterday, Citra Group chair Shadik Wahono said the company planned to form a joint venture with San Miguel that would eventually go public, either through an initial public offering (IPO) in the Philippines or through the issuance of toll road asset-backed securities called Business Trusts in Singapore.

The new holding firm, which has yet to be named, will handle both groups’ extensive toll road assets in Indonesia and the Philippines.

“Its focus on toll road infrastructure in the Philippines and Indonesia-with their large population base, strong economic growth and developing car cultures-positions the consortium to be a dynamic and significant force in infrastructure in Southeast Asia.”

San Miguel and Padma Funds LP., a Cayman Islands-based private equity firm that owns the Citra Group, control Citra Metro Manila Tollways Corp. and South Luzon Tollways Corp. The two toll road firms hold the concessions for the Metro Manila Skyway and South Luzon Expressway (SLEx), respectively. Revenue of both toll roads is expected to reach $266 million in 2012, up 12 per cent year-on-year.

On its own, San Miguel also holds concessions in the $250-millon North Luzon East Expressway and the $390-million Tarlac-Pangasinan-La Union Expressway projects. Padma, through Citra, owns and operates 70 kilometres of toll roads in Jakarta and Surabaya, Indonesia’s second-largest city next to the capital, handling 600,000 vehicles a day.

San Miguel and Padma plan to put up a new holding firm for existing and future assets of both groups. The public listing would likely take place after the first quarter of 2013, Wahono said, adding that the company might sell $200 million worth of new shares initially. A follow-on offering two or three years down the line of roughly the same amount might also be done.

He said the company had the option of raising $700 million to $1 billion in one move by tapping the Singapore market, which has more liquidity.

With interest rates in the region at record lows, “any instrument that pays out 7-8 per cent a year will make investors used to fixed-income assets very happy”, he said.

In the Philippines, the group hopes to develop the Skyway Stage 3 and 4, worth $590 million and $670 million, respectively; SLEx phase 4 worth $230 million and potentially the widening of the Southern Tagalogue Arterial Road (Star), which the group intended to acquire before yearend. Skyway stage 3 will link the elevated highway to North Luzon Expressway (NLEx) while stage 4 will stretch from Buendia to Bulacan.